2014
DOI: 10.1111/ases.12164
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Advances in reduced port laparoscopic liver resection

Abstract: Reduced port surgery has been attracting attention in the field of minimally invasive surgery. Although the use of SILS is becoming widespread, technical difficulty has delayed its adoption for laparoscopic liver resection. Recently, advances in laparoscopic liver resection have been made in tandem with advances in surgical skill and devices. The main driver in conventional laparoscopic liver resection's evolution to become less surgically invasive seems to be single-incision laparoscopic liver resection (SILL… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…9 Recently, liver resection has been attempted with SILS. [10][11][12] Although the use of SILS is becoming widespread, technical difficulty has delayed its adoption for surgical cases.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…9 Recently, liver resection has been attempted with SILS. [10][11][12] Although the use of SILS is becoming widespread, technical difficulty has delayed its adoption for surgical cases.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1,2 Relative to open resection, it offers decreased length of hospital stay, less blood loss, less postoperative pain, faster recovery, better cosmesis, and lower morbidity and mortality. 3 Oncological outcomes are comparable to those of open liver resection for HCC. 2,4,5 Moreover, reduced port surgery has been attracting attention in the field of laparoscopic hepatectomy with much less surgical invasiveness.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Hepatocellular carcinoma Current evidence suggests that local tumor recurrence, disease free survival and overall survival are similar between laparoscopic and open resections [39][40][41][42] . The results of these studies are summarized in Table 3.…”
Section: Long Term Outcomesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Robotic assistance is promising to aid difficult LLRs such as posterosuperior resections, non-anatomical resections along angulated or curvilinear resection planes, those requiring complex vascular and biliary reconstructions, but these need further refinement in skills and prospective validation [41] . Even single incision laparoscopic liver resection has been reported in very suitable tumors [42][43][44] . Few surgeons have reported the feasibility and safety of laparoscopic re-resections for malignant liver tumors, with a satisfactory conversion rate of 15%, although with significantly greater blood loss and operative time compared to primary LLR [45,46] .…”
Section: Advances In Llrmentioning
confidence: 99%